How is quantum entanglement observed?

In summary, scientists use various testing methods, such as the CHSH inequality and teleportation protocols, to observe and verify the existence of quantum entanglement. However, it is difficult to directly check for entanglement and requires an entangled measuring device. One example of this is sending pairs of photons through parallel aligned polarizers, which results in either perfect correlation or random measurements depending on whether the photons are entangled. The concept of entanglement swapping is also used to entangle particles that have never interacted with each other.
  • #1
Moviemann345
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Any measurement device used to witness the phenomenom seems like it would disrupt quantum entanglement. How do scientists manage to observe it?
 
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  • #2
Moviemann345 said:
Any measurement device used to witness the phenomenom seems like it would disrupt quantum entanglement. How do scientists manage to observe it?

True, but the statistics after a measurement are very different from those you expect in classical physics which does not allow entanglement. The various Bell inequalities are ways of testing the theory. The simplest one is CHSH where the chances of winning a certain game should be 1/2 but are sqrt(2)/2 for entangled pairs. This can be tested. Other tests are protocols such as teleportation which cannot work without entanglement .

One of the big experimental problems with entanglement is that it is very hard to directly check if you have an entangled state until you actually use up the entanglement. (and even then it's usually a problem for a single system).

If you do have some other entanglement which you can "trust" it is possible to make a non-local measurement such as a bell measurement (not to be confused with the bell inequality) to verify if your system is entangled, this is very hard to do in experiment. What you need for that is an entangled measuring device which let's you record the modular sum of the spin in the X and Z directions.
 
  • #3
Moviemann345 said:
How do scientists manage to observe it?

Fwiffo gave you a very good answer. Maybe the simplest example would be if you send 100 pairs of photons thru two parallel aligned polarizers. If the photon pairs are entangled – you will have 100% correlation, i.e. 100 measurements of (1, 0) or (0, 1) (i.e. if one photon get thru the other gets stopped).

I13-12-entanglement1.jpg


If the photon pairs are not entangled – you will have 100 random measurements of (0, 0) or (1, 1) or (1, 0) or (0, 1).

(Note: To get real violation of Bell Inequalities, you need to do more measurements on all relative angles, not only parallel.)


P.S. There is something called http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_teleportation#Entanglement_swapping" is used to entangle particles that never interacted with each other!
 
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1. What is quantum entanglement?

Quantum entanglement is a phenomenon in quantum physics where two or more particles become connected and behave as a single system, even when they are separated by large distances.

2. How is quantum entanglement observed?

Quantum entanglement is observed through various experiments and measurements. One common method is using a Bell test, which measures the correlation between entangled particles to confirm their entanglement.

3. What are the applications of quantum entanglement?

Quantum entanglement has potential applications in quantum communication, quantum computing, and quantum cryptography. It can also be used to study fundamental properties of quantum mechanics.

4. Can quantum entanglement be observed in large-scale objects?

No, quantum entanglement has only been observed in the microscopic world, such as particles and atoms. It is difficult to maintain entanglement in larger objects due to external influences and interactions.

5. How does quantum entanglement contribute to our understanding of the universe?

Quantum entanglement challenges our classical understanding of the universe and highlights the mysterious nature of quantum mechanics. It also plays a crucial role in theories like quantum field theory and quantum gravity.

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